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  1. #21
    Join Date
    14th July 12
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    St. Paul, Minnesota
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    Love the pics. Brings back fond (and not so fond) memories of splitting 6-8 cords of wood every fall & winter, all with a splitting maul or, when the going got tough, a 16-lb. sledge and wedges. Right now it's -10 f. here, and I remember the colder it got, the easier the wood (mostly oak) split. That was back in my p.k. (pre-kilt) days.

    Since the wind chill is currently -30 f., I'll leave the outdoor kilted activities for another day. But that box-pleated tweed kilt does look grand.
    " Anything worth doing is worth doing slowly." - Mae West -

  2. #22
    Join Date
    14th October 10
    Location
    Los Alamos, NM, USA
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    Quote Originally Posted by TheOfficialBren View Post
    Thank you, Robert. He's still onery but slowing down a little.
    ;-)
    Actually, it's John, but I knew who you meant. And, I'm slowing down a bit, too, so I know how your Dad feels.

    John
    I changed my signature. The old one was too ridiculous.

  3. #23
    Join Date
    15th August 12
    Location
    Tennessee, USA
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    Quote Originally Posted by mookien View Post
    Actually, it's John, but I knew who you meant. And, I'm slowing down a bit, too, so I know how your Dad feels.

    John
    Omg! I apologise! I should have been aying attention. My apologies, sir.
    The Official [BREN]

  4. #24
    Join Date
    3rd December 07
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    Rock Hill, SC
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    I was not fortunate enough to have any mechanical splitting tools at my disposal when I was younger. We didn't use wood for heat (I grew up in Northeast Georgia), but my Pop did use wood to heat his shop and when we went camping. My brothers and I did enjoy splitting wood and we made a competition of it. We would see who could split the most pieces with a single blow. My Pop did build a hydraulic splitter after I left for boot camp.
    Now I get by with a few different axes, a wedge and my trusty sledge. Great exercise and now I'm showing my boys how to properly split wood.

    Jake

  5. #25
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    15th August 12
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    Tennessee, USA
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jake_S View Post
    I was not fortunate enough to have any mechanical splitting tools at my disposal when I was younger. We didn't use wood for heat (I grew up in Northeast Georgia), but my Pop did use wood to heat his shop and when we went camping. My brothers and I did enjoy splitting wood and we made a competition of it. We would see who could split the most pieces with a single blow. My Pop did build a hydraulic splitter after I left for boot camp.
    Now I get by with a few different axes, a wedge and my trusty sledge. Great exercise and now I'm showing my boys how to properly split wood.

    Jake
    There is something more satisfying about splitting wood with an axe or a sledge'n'wedge than with a machine. It harkens back to the pastoral romance of yore.
    The Official [BREN]

  6. #26
    cormacmacguardhe's Avatar
    cormacmacguardhe is offline Oops, it seems this member needs to update their email address
    Join Date
    26th September 05
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    Maple Falls, Washington. USA
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    my father repeated an old saying,"a man who chops his own wood is twice warmed."

  7. #27
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    22nd December 10
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    Oddly, I don't care for splitting wood with a maul or ax...but I will gladly spend hours cutting hay with an austrian pattern scythe...go figure. I think it is a more meditative thing. Making a denim kilt now with some weight to the pleats to get a good swing...air conditioning doncha know?

  8. #28
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    15th August 12
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    Quote Originally Posted by cormacmacguardhe View Post
    my father repeated an old saying,"a man who chops his own wood is twice warmed."
    Wise words, indeed.
    The Official [BREN]

  9. #29
    Join Date
    14th October 10
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    Los Alamos, NM, USA
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jake_S View Post
    ... I grew up in Northeast Georgia ... My brothers and I did enjoy splitting wood and we made a competition of it. We would see who could split the most pieces with a single blow. ...

    Jake
    Jake: What part of NE Georgia? I have a sister in law and a brother in law who live in the Tiger/Clayton area. My Pop was from the Blue Ridge and Ellijay area in north central GA.

    "split the most pieces with a single blow"?! I can split one piece with six blows, if only four of them miss.

    John
    I changed my signature. The old one was too ridiculous.

  10. #30
    Join Date
    5th November 08
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    Marion, NC
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    My great uncle Amos said you get warm 7 times dealing with firewood:
    1) cutting the tree down
    2) cutting it into blocks
    3) splitting it
    4) loading it into the truck
    5) unloading it
    6) carrying it into the house
    7) burning it

    He thought about lots of stuff, my great uncle Amos.
    --dbh

    When given a choice, most people will choose.

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